The Wall Street Journal

  • THE OFFENSE

    The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, The New York Times and Politico worked together to weave a narrative that President Trump’s enhanced law enforcement activities in Washington, D.C. were not taking place in the high crime areas of D.C.

    THE TRUTH

    Half of the arrests made in the Washington, D.C., crime crackdown have been in high-crime areas. The Washington Post included a map of “troops in the district” in one of their articles which was based on “accounts from Post reporters on the ground in D.C. and verified videos on social media.” Their reporters got it wrong, and used incomplete data to create their inaccurate map. NYT’s Peter Baker then made a post on X that cited the map as evidence that law enforcement efforts were not present in high-crime areas. Next, the Wall Street Journal released a story corroborating the narrative, but based entirely on the testimony of Ebony Payne, a Democrat neighborhood commissioner in D.C., and a deeply conflicted source. Finally, Politico continued the narrative by citing the WSJ story in their Playbook newsletter where they attempted to downplay the impacts of the enhanced law enforcement efforts.

    KEY POINTS

    The Washington Post published a poorly substantiated map of law enforcement activity in D.C.
    NYT’s Peter Baker posted about the map, and caused the hoax to go viral.
    WSJ then released a story supporting the narrative, but only cited a Democrat neighborhood commissioner as evidence.
    Politico elevated the WSJ’s poorly source article on their newsletter which promoted the article and furthered the hoax.

    SOURCES

    On D.C. Streets, Feds Make a Show of Force
    Where National Guard troops and federal agents are patrolling D.C.
    Peter Baker's Post
    Playbook: Zelenskyy’s White House do-over
    White House: Half of D.C. crackdown arrests are in high-crime areas
    Ebony Payne Biography


  • OUTLET

    REPORTER

    CLAIM

    Italian Pasta Is Poised to Disappear From American Grocery Shelves

    CATEGORY

    THE OFFENSE

    Margherita Stancati and Gavin Bade, reporters for the Wall Street Journal, published an article and claimed Italian pasta would “disappear” from American grocery stores.

    THE TRUTH

    This is an exaggerated lie. These potential anti-dumping tariffs would only affect 16% percent of Italian pasta imports, so it’s ludicrous to assert that Italian pasta is “poised to disappear.” Even then, Italian pasta makers have weeks to comply with a simple data request and have their anti-dumping tariff rate adjusted before it’s finalized in January.

    KEY POINTS

    The Wall Street Journal’s Gavin Bade and Margherita Stancati lied in an effort to fearmonger against President Trump’s successful tariff policies.

    SOURCES

    Italian Pasta Is Poised to Disappear From American Grocery Shelves
    Deputy Press Secretary Kush Desai's Statement